A simple way to stop the bleeding

Stemming the flow of blood to starve a tumor or stop hemorrhage can be an expensive, repetitive task for doctors, requiring a variety of approaches and materials for different patients and different sized blood vessels. Often the interventional radiologists who perform these important procedures must try several times in order to successfully stop the bleeding.

A team of students from Johns Hopkins University’s Department of Materials Science and Engineering has developed a “super gel” that has the potential to eventually make this process easier, less expensive, and more efficient. The gel can pass through a catheter—the delivery vehicle of choice—but is hyper-absorbent enough to then swell with blood, creating a clot to block any bleeding.

“It’s similar, in a way, to when you get a scab or something when you cut your hand,” said Rasha Bara, one of the student team members who worked on the project. “It starts bleeding and you put a Band-Aid on there and it starts forming clots.”

The students tackled this challenge as part of their senior design experience, in which sponsors give students a small budget to design and build a prototype that solves a problem. The project’s clinical sponsor is Christos Georgiades, a medical doctor and director of interventional oncology at Johns Hopkins Medicine.

“The scope of our effort is to develop a one-size-fits-all, inexpensive embolization tool that can be easily and effectively deployed,” said Georgiades, who pointed out that currently available tools are not only expensive but also require considerable technical expertise.

Georgiades envisioned an exaggerated version of a kitchen sponge—something with immense swelling capacity that can be shrunk or folded into a delivery catheter. Ideally, it would easily pass through a narrow catheter in its dry form, but on expulsion into the blood vessel, it would immediately absorb blood and swell, restricting blood flow. In addition, the biocompatible “super gel” would also need to be able to withstand blood pressure—neither disintegrating nor flowing downstream to occlude the wrong vessel.

The students’ gel looks promising: It is porous and can pass through needles before rapidly regaining its original form.

“With this new gel, we’re pretty confident that it’s going to function well and remain harmless to the patient,” said Maria Lugo-Fagundo, leader of the student design team.